Yezhoù kwaek : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

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Stumm eus an 23 Her 2005 da 09:23


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The Kwa languages are spoken in the south-eastern part of Côte d'Ivoire, in Ghana, Togo and Benin, and the south-Western corner of Nigeria. The term was introduced 1885 by Krause and used by Westermann (1952) and Greenberg (1963). It is derived form the word for 'people' in many of these languages, which contains the root kwa. The Kwa group of languages is a branch of Volta-Congo and ultimately Niger-Congo.

Bennett & Sterk (1977) argued that Kwa in its original form was not a genetic unit, and proposed a reclassification in which the Yoruboid and Igboid languages are members of the Benue-Congo subfamily. The remaining languages are sometimes labeled New Kwa in order to avoid confusion with the old, larger Kwa family.

The Kwa languages are divided into two groups: Nyo and Left bank. The Nyo group comprises about 50 languages mainly spoken in Ghana and southern Côte d'Ivoire; it includes the Akan languages, Ga-Dangme, Anyi, Baule, and the numerous Potou-Tano languages (including the Guang languages and Logba) The remaining Kwa languages are called Left bank because they are spoken on the Eastern side of the Volta River in Ghana, Togo, Benin and southwestern Nigeria. Of this group of about 25 languages, the Gbe cluster is the largest with some five million speakers; other languages include Avatime, Nyangbo-Tafi and Animere.

See also